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as no pride; unhappily he realizes that art has no limitations, he feels darkly how far he is from the goal, and while, perhaps he is admired by others, he grieves that he has not yet reached the point where the better genius shall shine before him like a distant sun." (Teplitz, July 17, to an admirer ten years old.) 99. "You yourself know what a change is wrought by a few years in the case of an artist who is continually pushing forward. The greater the progress which one makes in art, the less is one satisfied with one's old works." (Vienna, August 4, 1800, to Mathisson, in the dedication of his setting of "Adelaide." "My most ardent wish will be fulfilled if you are not displeased with the musical composition of your heavenly 'Adelaide.'") 100. "Those composers are exemplars who unite nature and art in their works." (Baden, in 1824, to Freudenberg, organist from Breslau.) 101. "What will be the judgment a century hence concerning the lauded works of our favorite composers today? Inasmuch as nearly everything is subject to the changes of time, and, more's the pity, the fashions of time, only that which is good and true, will endure like a rock, and no wanton hand will ever venture to defile it. Then let every man do that which is right, strive with all his might toward the goal which can never be attained, develop to the last breath the gifts with which a gracious Creator has endowed him, and never cease to learn; for 'Life is short, art eternal!'" (From the notes in the instruction book of Archduke Rudolph.) 102. "Famous artists always labor under an embarrassment;--therefore first works are the best, though they may have sprung out of dark ground." (Conversation-book of 1840.) 103. "A musician is also a poet; he also can feel himself transported by a pair of eyes into another and more beautiful world where greater souls make sport of him and set him right difficult tasks." (August 15, 1812, to Bettina von Arnim.) 104. "I told Goethe my opinion as to how applause affects men like us, and that we want our equals to hear us understandingly! Emotion suits women only; music ought to strike fire from the soul of a man." (August 15, 1810, to Bettina von Arnim.) 105. "Most people are touched by anything good; but they do not partake of the artist's nature; artists are ardent, they do not weep." (Reported to Goethe by Betti
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